Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Expertise: Technology, Biotech, Renewable energy

Education: M.S,J. Northwestern (Medill School) 1978; B.A. Rice University, History and Political Science 1977

Awards & Accomplishments: Tech reporter since 1982, Freelance since 1983, on Internet since 1985. Created first online coverage of Internet with a magazine, Interactive Age, 1994 Co-wrote BBS Systems for Business in 1991, Wrote Guide to Field Computing in 1992 Wrote technology history now called "Living with Moore's Law" in 2001, 2010, 2021 Author of over a dozen books, both fiction and non-fiction

About Dana:
Dana Blankenhorn has been a financial journalist since 1978, a technology journalist since 1982, and an Internet journalist since 1985. He writes a Substack newsletter, Facing the Future, which covers technology, markets, and politics.

He has written a half-dozen technology books, several novels available at the Amazon Kindle store, and covered beats ranging from education to e-commerce, and from open source to renewable energy. He lives in Atlanta.

Recent Articles

VFS Stock Alert: 7 Things to Know as VinFast Starts Trading Today

VinFast claims a market cap of $23 billion and hopes to make 150,000 cars per year from a factory it's now building in North Carolina,

META Stock Spotlight: The Reality of Meta Platform’s 150% AI-Fueled Surge

Watch the team around Instagram head Adam Mosseri for hints on when generative Artificial Intelligence will become a profit center for Meta.

NKLA Stock Alert: Nikola Issues Major Truck Recall

Nikola hopes to get investors interested in hydrogen fuel cells as a power plant for its semi-trucks after failing with batteries.

AMC Stock Alert: Judge Approves APE Conversion

The deal lets AMC raise more money by selling more stock, and includes a 1:10 reverse stock split. Whether it matters depends on an end to the current Hollywood strikes

LI Stock Analysis: What the Market Is Telling Us About Li Auto

Li tripled production from a year ago, as its hybrid SUVs found favor with rich Chinese buyers. But investors worry about any Chinese stock now, so profit taking was inevitable.